Tuesday, July 7

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Morocco ditches time change could Europe follow
Featured, Technology

Morocco ditches time change could Europe follow

    Winter may be coming, but Morocco has decided to stop marking the changing of the seasons by turning back its clocks. As millions of people around the world prepare for an extra hour of sleep this weekend (or one more episode of your current Netflix series of choice), the north African nation has instead abandoned the concept of clock changes and chosen to stick to summer time all year round. The Moroccan government said the decision to stay on GMT+1 would save an extra hour of natural light and reduce electricity consumption. It is a move that could be soon replicated in plenty of other countries, with the EU consulting on a proposal to abandon the practice from 2019. Since 2002, the twice-yearly time change has been dictated by an EU directive, with a harmonised...
Brexit could kill 5,600 people a year by making fruit and veg unaffordable
Featured, United Kingdom

Brexit could kill 5,600 people a year by making fruit and veg unaffordable

    A hard Brexit could kill up to 5,600 people a year because people won't be able to afford as many fruit and vegetables, researchers claim. Scientists say the rising price of importing food will worsen people's diets and lead to more cases of cancer, heart disease and stroke within 10 years. More than 90 per cent of the UK's fruit and vegetables are imported, meaning the prices will likely go up when it leaves the EU. And pricier fresh foods could put people off, experts say, putting them more at risk of developing deadly diseases. This rise in disease could also cost the NHS an extra £600million a year, according to the Oxford University scientists. But Julian Jessop, chief economist at the Institute of Economic Affairs, told MailOnline the claim Brexit could lea...
Asda considers 2,500 job cuts
Featured, United Kingdom

Asda considers 2,500 job cuts

    Asda is consulting staff on changes to its business that could result in 2,500 job losses next year when the UK leaves the EU. The chain, which is currently planning on merging with Sainsbury's, is the latest major supermarket to announce a shake-up of the way it works aimed at saving costs. Asda said: In a competitive retail market, where customers rightly expect great value and ease of service we must always look at how we can work more quickly and efficiently for them and inevitably, that means we need to consider changing the roles we need our colleagues to do or the hours needed in particular parts of our stores. We believe the proposed changes we are consulting on would allow us to do a better job for our customers. We also recognise that discussions about po...
PM sees off threat from Brexit critics
Featured, United Kingdom

PM sees off threat from Brexit critics

    Theresa May has emerged unscathed from a packed meeting of the party’s backbench 1922 Committee after an emotional and personal speech reportedly won over MPs, despite doubts over her Brexit negotiating strategy. The prime minister faced a handful of awkward questions from Brexiters including Nadine Dorries, Sir Edward Leigh and Philip Davies, but loyalists said she won over the room and there appeared little sign that a leadership challenge looked more likely. Amber Rudd, the former home secretary, said that May had made an emotional and personal speech and won over colleagues, many of whom were angry with lurid anonymous briefings in the Sunday newspapers. MPs present said Dorries demanded to know if May’s chief Brexit negotiator, Oliver Robbins, was freelancing ...
Duke and Duchess of Sussex receive royal welcome in Tonga
Featured, United Kingdom

Duke and Duchess of Sussex receive royal welcome in Tonga

    The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have touched down in Tonga to a  royal welcome, complete with music and dancing. They were greeted at Fua’-amotu Airport by Princess Angelika Latufuipeka, the only daughter and eldest child of King Tupou VI and Queen Nanasipau’u Tuku’aho. She became Tonga’s High Commissioner to Australia when her father became king. The Duchess wore a red Self Portrait dress, mirroring the colour of the Tongan flag. The royal couple walked the red carpet, accompanied by traditional entertainment from Pelehake villagers. Before entering the airport’s royal suite, the Duchess received flowers from the Hon. Melenaite Tuipelehake, a great-niece of the King. Their route out of the airport saw school children line the roads for miles, spaced evenly apart to ...
Pipe bombs against Clinton, Obama are a False Flag
America, Featured

Pipe bombs against Clinton, Obama are a False Flag

    Minutes after news broke of potential explosive devices being mailed to the homes of former Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton, along with CNN’s New York City studio, the dark corners of the conservative Internet were declaring it a plot to gin up empathy for Democrats. Cries that the bomb threats was merely a false flag operation were evident on Twitter and pro-Trump forums. Many of the personalities pushing the claim were fringe types. But not all of them. John Cardillo, a former NYPD officer and popular right-wing radio host, initially denounced political violence on both sides of the aisle, but quickly broadcast his skepticism that the threats were legit. Just too coincidental that two weeks before Election Day, as the blue wave has turned into a ripple, a...
The problem with Harry and Meghan’s popularity
Featured, United Kingdom

The problem with Harry and Meghan’s popularity

    The crowds turning out in Australia to greet Meghan and Harry this week, where the couple are on a 16-day tour, are unprecedented. At one event in Sydney it was estimated by local media that a crowd of 15,000 people turned out to see the couple who announced on the first day of their Australian trip that Meghan was pregnant. On a trip to Victoria on Thursday well-wishers started assembling as early as 5am to get a glimpse of the couple. Crowds of that size have not appeared for Queen Elizabeth on any of her trips to Australia (which date back as far as the 1950s), and Harry and Megmania easily eclipses the enthusiasm with which William and Kate’s 2104 trip to Australia even with crowd-pulling Prince George in tow were received. But with great popularity comes great...
Queen speaks publicly on Brexit for first time during Dutch royal visit
Featured, United Kingdom

Queen speaks publicly on Brexit for first time during Dutch royal visit

    During a state banquet for the King of the Netherlands and his wife Queen Maxima, she said that as we look toward a new partnership with Europe, the values shared by the UK and Holland are our greatest assets. The Queen, who is impartial in political matters, chose to emphasise the qualities needed by the UK and one of its closet European neighbours going forward as UK politicians continue to be bitterly divided by Brexit. Earlier, in a speech to both Houses of Parliament, King Willem-Alexander urged the government to lift the shadow of uncertainty hanging over Dutch nationals living in Britain after Brexit. And in his address at the Palace dinner, with Ms May seated nearby, the foreign head of state continued: At present, a lot of attention is focused on the tec...
Khashoggi case: UK to revoke visas
Featured, United Kingdom

Khashoggi case: UK to revoke visas

    Theresa May has announced the UK government will today revoke visas of suspects related to the murder of the Saudi journalist and dissident, Jamal Khashoggi. The action comes after the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, dismissed the kingdom's efforts to blame Mr Khashoggi's death within the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on rouge operatives. Ms May, who will later speak with King Salman of Saudi Arabia over the killing, told MPs gathered in the Commons that the government condemned the murder of the journalist in the strongest possible terms. She said ministers have made clear that the Saudi officials must cooperate with Turkey and conduct a full and credible investigation. She continued: The claim that has been made that Mr Khashoggi died in a fight does not ...
Slavery victim trafficked to UK told to go home: MPs hear
Featured, United Kingdom

Slavery victim trafficked to UK told to go home: MPs hear

    A victim of modern slavery who was trafficked to the UK at the age of three and subject to decades of sexual abuse was told to leave the country as soon as they were identified, MPs have heard. The former Independent Anti-Slavery commissioner told a parliamentary committee about an individual who was informed by the Home Office that they had been recognised as trafficking victim and in the same letter told that they were an illegal immigrant. Kevin Hyland OBE was speaking to the Home Affairs Select Committee on Tuesday about a lack of professionalism in the government’s approach to tackling modern slavery, warning that it sometimes makes it up as it goes along. I’ve seen a case where a child was trafficked to the UK at the age of three and then sexually abused for ...